I have seen this type of thing happen when there is a bit of junk in a line that falls back when the flow has stopped, and then move back with the flow to stop it when it gets to a point where the water is restricted. More often, I have seen it to be just something odd about the faucet making it creep off from the flow of the water going through it.
Either it is just the excess water from the pipes or the shut off valve you used to shut the water off with, is not working one hundred percent.
It won't stop suddenly, but will reduce the flow so you get less and less water.
because it helps to prevent any water from accidentally leaking or spilling out. Just like turning off the faucet at home to stop water from flowing. :-/
Now this is a real testor. I think it has to be a farce question. Anybody else living in the premises? Cold and/or hot water doesn't come out?
Water pipes may be covered with foam rubber to stop condensation dripping from the surface of cold water pipes in warm and damp climates, and to insulate hot water pipes so the water in them does not cool while flowing from the hot water tank to the faucet,
Often a faucet will sputter if there is air in the lines. This happens if the water has been turned off and then on again. If this is the cause, it is only necessary to run the water a while and the air will get out of the lines, and the sputtering will stop.
No. An aqueduct is built to transport water.
*Niagara
replace or tighten the seals in the faucet.
Either replace the washer on the hot side in the faucet (or buy a new washerless faucet), replace the "angle-stop" with a "quarter-turn" style, or install a "water hammer arrestor". (There is a real convenient style on the market, it fits between the incoming nut at the angle stop and the thread on the body of the stop itself).
Someone may have shut off the water to that faucet, or a pipe may have froze, or there may be air in the pipe.
its not the co.pper line its the faucet stem or angle stop
Most likely, air in the line.